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Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 Search Update: Discovery of Wreckage A Miraculous Breakthrough

Just this week, a wreckage from what appears to be a Boeing 777 jet was discovered on a beach in the Indian Ocean prompting investigators that this could be a major breakthrough to the 18-month old Malaysian Flight MH370 mystery case.

A report from Mirror.co.uk said that a two-meter long debris was found on the French island of Reunion, which is close to Mauritius. It is thought by experts who were there to check the find that it is a part of a Boeing 777 airplane, which is the exact same model of the aircraft that got lost without a trace in 2014.

The publication also confirmed that officials at The Boeing Company have already assessed the photographs of the wreckage sent to their office and agreed that "it is consistent with a 777 flaperon, part of the plane's wing."

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Sources close to the investigation also said that there is a "unique element" to the flaperon that was spotted by Boeing. No further details on this matter were revealed.

Police and investigators on the French-speaking Island are currently checking the serial numbers of the wreckage with hopes to link the object to the missing MH370.

Results are expected to be announced "in a matter of days." Until then, it must be assumed as just any plane debris getting washed up to the shore.

It's been over 500 days since the Malaysian jetliner went missing along with its 239 passengers and crew on board. The flight originated from Kuala Lumpur en route to Beijing on March 8 of last year.

Officials from Malaysia have already declared the disappearance of the flight as an accident.

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